BUSF_A01.qxd

(Darren Dugan) #1
Routines for use with investment projects

profitable opportunities overlooked by one business will probably be taken up by
another. Any business that regularly overlooks opportunities must sooner or later fall
by the wayside.
Members of staff need to be encouraged to identify new products, new markets,
new ways of supplying those markets and new approaches to production. Technical
help should be available to help staff to develop ideas into formal investment
proposals.

Assembling the relevant data for an investment proposal


Estimates of the relevant costs associated with the proposal must be made. The
estimation probably needs to be carried out by a financial manager. Care must be
taken to gather all relevant costs and benefits. There is a danger that bias can influence
some of the cost estimates, particularly where a manager is strongly in favour of
or against the proposal. If an independent financial manager can carry out this task, it
may help to promote freedom from bias.

Assessing the data and reaching a decision


The data must be fed into the decision-making model that the business is using.
Assuming that the business is a wealth maximiser, this model should be NPV. Once
again this process demands certain technical skill and freedom from bias, so it is best
carried out by someone who has those attributes, such as a member of the business’s
finance staff.

Implementing the decision


Action needs to be taken to get the project under way. A project team may well be
established to take the necessary steps.

Monitoring the effects of the decision


Reviews, sometimes known as post audits, need to be carried out to try to assess
the effectiveness of the project. One of the reasons for this is to assess the quality of the
decision-making process, so that improvements in this process can be sought and
instigated in respect of future decisions.
The progress of the project must also be monitored to assess whether or not it is
economic to continue with it. Periodically, over the life of the project, the question as
to whether the project should be abandoned needs to be raised. The project will not be
able to continue indefinitely – plant wears out, markets decline – so identifying the
economically optimum moment for its abandonment is important. For the wealth-
maximising business, this process logically involves an NPV analysis of the relevant
costs and benefits of continuation relative to those associated with abandonment.

Investment decisions in practice


Pike (1996) found that 72 per cent of the 100 large UK businesses surveyed by him
in 1992 carried out a post audit on ‘most major projects’. The 1992 study was a
continuation of a longitudinal study of investment practices of large UK businesses.

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